1.15BiomarkersReference Guide2,800 words - 14 min read
Biomarkers & Testing — Cardiovascular Risk Assessment | IQ Healthspan Comprehensive cardiovascular biomarker comparison: ApoB vs LDL-C, the lipoprotein cascade, and CAC scoring. APOB vs. LDL-C: WHY THEY DIVERGE LDL-C (mg/dL) ApoB (mg/dL) 50 100 150 200 High LDL-C, Low ApoB (safer) Low LDL-C, High ApoB (higher risk) Discordance zone: LDL-C misses true risk CARDIOVASCULAR BIOMARKER HIERARCHY #1 ApoBDirect atherogenic particle count — gold standard #2 CAC ScoreActual disease presence; best risk stratifier at 40+ #3 Lp(a)Genetic; test once; determines lifetime risk baseline #4 hsCRPInflammation burden; adds risk beyond lipid profile #5 ApoB:ApoA1 ratioStrongest ratio predictor; better than total:HDL BIOMARKERS & TESTING Why ApoB tells you what LDL-C cannot IQ HEALTHSPAN

The Complete Lab Reference Guide: Normal Ranges vs Longevity Optimal Targets for 50+ Biomarkers

A comprehensive, print-and-keep reference guide comparing standard lab reference ranges with longevity-optimized targets for every major biomarker covered in the IQ Healthspan library — organized by category for easy clinical use.

Derek Giordano
Derek Giordano
Founder & Editor, IQ Healthspan
Mar 8, 2027
Published
Apr 8, 2026
Updated
✓ Cited Sources
Key Takeaways
  • The distinction between standard reference ranges and longevity-optimal targets is the most practically important concept in preventive medicine. Standard ranges are established from population distributions and represent statistical normality in a population with 40 percent metabolic syndrome prevalence — not biological optimality.
  • The highest-value targets to optimize beyond standard normal ranges are: ApoB (target below 70 vs standard below 100 mg/dL), fasting insulin (target below 7 vs standard below 25 uIU/mL), 25-OH vitamin D (target 40-60 vs standard 20-50 ng/mL), hsCRP (target below 1.0 vs standard below 3.0 mg/L), and TSH (target 1.0-2.5 vs standard 0.4-4.0 mIU/L).
  • Biomarkers should be interpreted in the context of the whole clinical picture, not in isolation. An elevated hsCRP in the context of a recent respiratory infection is normal; persistent elevation across multiple measurements warrants investigation.
  • Serial tracking of biomarker trends is more valuable than any single measurement. A fasting insulin rising from 5 to 9 uIU/mL over 3 years, even while remaining within normal range, signals developing insulin resistance that warrants intervention.
  • This reference guide is intended as a companion to article 1.9 (The Complete Longevity Lab Testing Guide). That article covers testing strategy and frequency; this article provides the numerical targets.

This reference guide presents longevity-optimized targets for the biomarkers most relevant to aging medicine, alongside standard lab reference ranges. It is intended as a practical clinical companion to the testing strategy in article 1.9.1

Cardiovascular and Lipid Biomarkers

BiomarkerStandard Lab RangeLongevity Optimal Target
Total cholesterolBelow 200 mg/dL150-180 mg/dL (without statin)
LDL cholesterolBelow 100 mg/dLBelow 70 mg/dL preferred
ApoBBelow 100 mg/dLBelow 70 mg/dL
HDL cholesterol (men)Above 40 mg/dLAbove 50 mg/dL preferred
TriglyceridesBelow 150 mg/dLBelow 80 mg/dL optimal
Lp(a)Below 50 mg/dLBelow 30 mg/dL ideal; test once
hsCRPBelow 3.0 mg/LBelow 1.0 mg/L optimal
HomocysteineBelow 15 umol/LBelow 9 umol/L

Metabolic Biomarkers

BiomarkerStandard Lab RangeLongevity Optimal Target
Fasting glucose70-99 mg/dL70-85 mg/dL
HbA1cBelow 5.7%Below 5.3% optimal
Fasting insulinBelow 25 uIU/mLBelow 7 uIU/mL
HOMA-IRBelow 2.5Below 1.0 optimal
Uric acid (men)3.4-7.0 mg/dLBelow 5.5 mg/dL
Uric acid (women)2.4-6.0 mg/dLBelow 5.0 mg/dL
Ferritin (men)12-300 ng/mL50-150 ng/mL
Ferritin (women, post-M)12-150 ng/mL30-100 ng/mL

Nutritional Biomarkers

BiomarkerStandard Lab RangeLongevity Optimal Target
25-OH Vitamin D20-50 ng/mL40-60 ng/mL
Omega-3 indexNo standard rangeAbove 8%
Vitamin B12200-900 pg/mLAbove 400 pg/mL; ideally 500-900
RBC Magnesium4.2-6.8 mg/dLUpper half of range (above 5.5)
Zinc (plasma)60-120 ug/dLUpper half of range (above 90)

Hormonal Biomarkers

BiomarkerStandard Lab RangeLongevity Optimal Target
TSH0.4-4.0 mIU/L1.0-2.5 mIU/L
Total testosterone (men)300-1000 ng/dL500-900 ng/dL (age-adjusted)
Free testosterone (men)9-30 pg/mL15-25 pg/mL preferred
IGF-1Age-specificMid-range for age; avoid both extremes
DHEA-S (men)80-560 ug/dLUpper third of age-appropriate range

References

  1. 1Attia P, Gifford B. "Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity." Harmony Books. 2023. [PubMed]
  2. 2Grundy SM, et al. "2018 AHA/ACC Guideline on the Management of Blood Cholesterol." JACC. 2019;73(24):e285-e350. [PubMed]
Derek Giordano
Derek Giordano
Founder & Editor, IQ Healthspan
Derek Giordano is the founder and editor of IQ Healthspan. Every article is independently researched and sourced to peer-reviewed scientific literature with numbered citations readers can verify. Derek has spent over a decade synthesizing longevity research, translating complex clinical and preclinical findings into accessible, evidence-based guidance. IQ Healthspan maintains no supplement brand partnerships, affiliate relationships, or financial conflicts of interest.

All Claims Sourced to Peer-Reviewed Research

Readers can verify via numbered citations

Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making decisions about your health. Read full medical disclaimer →